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![]() Car Free A year without wheels
"Sod the streets at once. Rip up all city streets with jackhammers and
use the junk-asphalt (after melting) to create a huge parking and
auto-storage lot on the outskirts of town, preferably out of sight...
All public movement would be by foot and a fleet of bicycles, maintained
by the city police force."
--Hunter S. Thompson's platform for his run for Sheriff of Aspen,
Colorado, 1970 My cell phone rang at the office early one morning. A colleague, May,
was calling to tell me she'd be quite late to work--her car had broken
down on South Lake Shore Drive, in the far left lane, and she was
waiting for a tow truck. Her day was off to a rather harrowing start.
A few minutes later, June, another colleague, rushed into the office,
wide-eyed and upset. Her morning had been much worse. On her way to
work, another driver had nearly run her off the road. When June swerved
around to avoid a collision, she ended up in front of the other car.
That driver lost it. Deciding she'd been cut off, she pulled up beside
June, nearly running her off the road, and started screaming, "I've
got
a kid in here." Moments later, she bumped her car into June's, then
fell back and started ramming into June's car until a police officer,
who'd seen the whole incident, interceded. "Lady, that's road
rage,"
he scolded the vehicular aggressor. "I could arrest you for attempted
murder." Instead, he booked her for battery, and told her to find a
relative to pick up her kid. She was going to jail.
Although I sympathized with my co-workers' plight, I don't ever have
mornings like this. I no longer own a car. Last summer, our lease was up again. I studied Consumer Reports; we
visited a couple of car dealers to try and decide what model would fit
our budget and needs. But I just wasn't into it.
When I'd lived in New York City right out of college, we hadn't owned
a car and I loved it. Every day I'd ride the subway down to Wall
Street
and back again. Every weekend, we'd explore the city, often walking
incredible expanses of Manhattan, in a constant state of wonder and
discovery about the big exciting city. Although we'd earlier left the
suburbs for the inner-city confines of Hyde Park and the University of
Chicago, it was that time spent on the streets of New York that made us
committed city dwellers.
A couple decades later, I missed that spirit of discovery, that
tangible connection to the city that walking and riding the subway
brought. Furthermore, a "practical" car was costing me about $1,000
a
month to operate and park; that's $12,000 a year for something that
was
as much a nuisance as a boon. So I made the pitch to Jan: why not just
turn our car in when the lease expires and see what it's like? If it
doesn't work out, we can go lease a new car anytime we want.
Meanwhile,
we'll save a lot of money...
Surprisingly, she agreed, our kids signed on, and we did it. I
actually turned the car in a week early.
I expected summer and fall to be a pleasant experiment, but I really
didn't know what to expect come winter. Would not having a car just
add
to the misery of my most miserable season? Would we be test-driving
Hondas in the snow? A year later, we're still car free and expect to
stay this way. Beyond the financial windfall of our change, we've
connected with the city in a whole new way, we get more exercise, and
our stress level has fallen. And we've learned, much more than we ever
expected to--about our selves, our city and our society. This obsession writ large explains much about our national
priorities. Ever since newspaper editor Horace Greeley admonished a new
nation to "Go West," the desire to traverse the open road has
becoming
a defining national motif. The invention of the automobile made the
road
every American's destiny; after World War II that destiny became the
suburbs. Vast spaces organized around the automobile, suburbs are
impossible to live in without a car. For a generation or two, we bought
into that easily accessible "fulfillment" of the American Dream: a
third of an acre, a two-car garage, and a strip mall on every mile. In
1952, former General Motors President Charles Erwin Wilson said, "What
is good for the country is good for General Motors, and what's good
for
General Motors is good for the country." This quote morphed into the
foundation for a longstanding linkage of American prosperity with the
automobile. Today, many American families no longer own a car--they own
several. "The pedestrian is a social being: he is also a transportation unit,
and a marvelously complex one and efficient one. He is self-contained,
self-propelled, and moves forward with a field of vision about 100
degrees wide, further widening this with back-and-forth scanning
movements to almost 180 degrees. He monitors a host of equations: two
crossing patterns at left front, 290 feet a minute, three on the right,
angle on the cars 30 degrees and closing, a pair abreast dead ahead, a
traffic light starting to flash DON'T WALK. In fractions of a second
he
responds with course shifts, accelerations, and retards, and he signals
to others that he is doing so."
--William H. Whyte, "City: Rediscovering the Center" I get around now by walking, riding the CTA and taking taxis. When I
need a car, I share one through I-Go or, more rarely, rent one. In a
year, I've rented cars twice--both times, ironically, for wakes in the
suburbs. Walking is another windfall of my car-free life; beyond the
health benefits, it offers a tactile relationship with the city, a
sense
of place grounded in its details, its people, its millions of small
patterns of daily existence adding up to a dynamic urban mosaic.
Last summer, I was walking the two miles home from work one Sunday
afternoon when I noticed that what seemed like the entire south end of
the Loop was shut down for a movie shoot. I've encountered plenty of
movie sets in the city over the years, but never one so vast, taking up
so much real estate. I kept walking, and soon discovered street signs
and bus-stop ads describing the wonders of "Gotham": I'd wandered
into
the shooting of the extensive car chase through the city in "Batman
Begins." I decided to walk around and explore a bit; workers were
circumspect about the nature of the project, yielding a fake movie name
when I queried them, then fessing up when I pointed out the Gotham
signs. It was as if I'd stumbled onto a vast secret project right
there
in downtown Chicago.
The car-free life solidifies your relationship to your local
community. I walk to the grocery store now, and have to take care not
to
overload my cart, which means local shops, like the wine store in front
of my building or the coffee shop across the street that roasts its own
beans, are more important. I rarely miss my Saturday morning at the
farmers' market on the street where I live. It's where I buy my
produce.
I am lucky that since I live downtown, I'm close to a stop for every
El line in the city. The CTA has become a daily part of my life. The
CTA's smart card--the Chicago Card Plus--is a revolution in transit
travel. Nevermore need I worry about whether I have the right change
before getting on the train or bus; never again need I wait in line to
buy a ticket. Simply shake my backside in front of the sensor--I keep
the card in my wallet--and get on the train. My credit card is
automatically nicked for $20 whenever I need a re-up.
The CTA shapes your lifestyle when you live a car-free life. I'm less
likely to go places too far off the El system now. We learned this the
hard way last October, when we went to a party in Bridgeport. After
riding the bus down State Street, we had to walk by the housing
projects
that abut IIT. We were the only pedestrians in sight that early
evening.
Crossing the expressway, a man on a bike who'd emerged from the
projects
started circling around in front of us. When he rode toward us
determinedly and started talking, rather strangely, Jan panicked and
took off running. I bravely hesitated a second, and then ran after her.
He rode after us, suspiciously apologizing that he was trying to help
us. When we arrived at our destination, we laughed at our lack of
steely
resolve, but this scare put us into a perfect frame of mind for a
Halloween party.
We'd planned to grab a taxi home afterwards. Part of the pact we'd
made with ourselves when we gave up our car is that we would never
hesitate to hail a cab when we wanted one. Rainy day? Hail a cab. Late
night? Hail a cab. Physically exhausted or carrying a bunch of shopping
bags? Hail a cab. We can afford a lot of taxi rides with the thousand
bucks a month we're saving. Since we suspected the flow of cabs here
would not be as steady as in our downtown neighborhood, we figured we
would telephone the taxi dispatch. Bad idea, apparently, as the
seasoned
locals at the party all pointed out that we'd be waiting at least an
hour for one to find its way to Bridgeport. The party guests insisted
that one of them would drive us home; we reluctantly and appreciatively
agreed.
We learned that night we needed car sharing. It would have meant one
of us would have to refrain from the adult beverages in order to drive,
but it would have been the best solution to visiting a taxi-deficient
zone on a late night.
I-Go car sharing, a service in Chicago operated by an affiliate of
the nonprofit Center for Neighborhood Technology, is a brilliant
solution to the urban transportation puzzle. After signing up and
paying
a modest fee, you have access to perfectly functional cars--usually a
Honda Civic--parked at one of twenty-eight strategic points around the
city. Simply go online and make a reservation, which can be done at the
last minute if the car's available, walk to the location and drive
off.
You pay by the hour and the mile; insurance and fuel are included. Car
sharing springs from the environmental movement: Nothing is more
wasteful than city dwellers owning, operating and storing their own
cars. Think about your car use: it may be one of your most valuable
possessions, yet it probably spends most of its time in disuse. Even if
you drive to work, it sits parked all day till you leave.
I've found I-Go to be an outstanding service, even though I only need
it once a month or so. I caught I-Go CEO Sharon Feigon on the phone as
she was heading out to launch two more cars in the service; another two
are coming on line next week. She says the service is really taking
off,
and expects to have fifty cars by yearend. "We have 1,300 members, and
are growing at the rate of a hundred members a month," she notes
excitedly.
I-Go has a sign hanging at one of the parking spaces that says,
"Don't let a car own you." It might have been written just for me.
When you think about it, a car is an enormous impediment to movement
within a city. Everywhere you go, every decision you make, is shaped by
your need to find a place to park this 3,000-pound hunk of steel
you're
toting around. I don't even like to carry a backpack. Without a car,
you're liberated: your schedule can be ruled by efficiency one day,
serendipity the next. Want to stop at Marshall Field's on the way home
from work, or pick up lunch at a not-so-usual place on the way in? A
no-brainer if you're moving on foot or by CTA. "`The young man who drove me to the airport says he lives thirty
miles from school, a one-hour drive each way,' I record [architect
Daniel] Solomon's words in my book. `His 2-1/2-year old truck has
78,000 miles on it and he hasn't been anywhere. Fifty times the
Odyssey, eight times the travels of Marco Polo, how many hundreds of
times the walks of Leopold Bloom? And with what density of experience,
what learned in his 78,000 mile journey?' Where is it writ that this
nation of the fresh start did better by its policy of split and
sprawl?"
-- Jane Holtz Kay, author of "Asphalt Nation: How the Automobile
Took Over America and How We Can Take It Back" I've started to playfully refer to drivers as "car people" in the
same spirit that gays call straights "breeders." When I was a car
person, I never realized how much stress driving in and around the city
creates. When I'm behind the wheel, I join my fellow travelers in a
mutual contest of automotive aggression. Occasionally that aggression
manifests in the extreme, like the road rage my colleague suffered last
week, or the time a cab driver bumped the front of my car when I
refused
to give way to his aggression and "allow" him to force his way into
my
lane, in standstill traffic, in front of me. The screaming match that
ensued with the cabdriver is now a source for family chuckles--we were
so hysterical with anger that we could only screech his taxi number
repeatedly in some attempt at sounding authoritatively threatening--but
the intensity of the situation at the time was no laughing matter.
On the other hand, I've generally found CTA riders to be a civil
crowd. Sure, we get our share of strongly "perfumed" homeless people
or drunken college kids, but we riders have a tacit understanding that
ours is a shared destiny. We help others out, in small ways, whether
it's pointing out the empty seat on the bus to the blind woman who
boards, or helping a visitor from Iowa get her massive suitcases down
the stairs and onto the Blue Line platform.
When we're in cars, on the other hand, we're in a solitary fortress.
We act out, with more aggression than normal, because we feel a certain
level of anonymity combined with the empowerment that 3,000 pounds of
mechanized steel under our control offers. Imagine how our behavior
behind the wheel might change if we arrived at the office, after
cutting
someone off or running a red light, and a video of our transgression
was
playing on the monitors of our co-workers. Personal accountability is a
powerful force for civility. But there's a big difference between cars in the city and cars on
the open road. As Chicago undergoes a central city
renaissance--apparent
in even the most cursory perusal of real estate development around the
Loop, it's obvious that our urban density is increasing, and
increasing
fast. Density is not always a bad thing; much of the excitement of New
York City derives from the masses of people moving through its streets.
But most New Yorkers have learned to live without cars in the city. In
London, drivers who bring cars into the central city are now assessed a
"congestion charge" of approximately $14 a day; proceeds are
earmarked
for additional buses and enhancements to the public-transportation
system.
Chicagoans are welded to our cars, and it will take visionary
leadership to start moving our collective values away from automotive
dependence. Although Mayor Daley has been a forceful proponent of
increasing bicycle usage in the city, the bike is still a challenging
vehicle for its user. While sidewalk-to-street-width ratios are
disproportionately favorable to cars, bike users suffer a much rougher
fate even than pedestrians. I bicycled out from the Loop to Northerly
Island this past weekend, and was struck by the lack of clarity about
the paths to be used by cyclists, especially on Solidarity Drive, the
road that connects Shedd Aquarium to the Adler Planetarium. Where a
separate bike lane might stand between the cars on the street and the
pedestrians swarming the sidewalk, parked cars are given sway. It's a
stark reminder of a disjointed value system that favors car users above
all.
The old Meigs Field airport terminal has been turned into a field
house of sorts for the charmingly underdeveloped park that the Mayor
created with his nocturnal backhoes. Hanging on its walls are
photographs from the 1933 World's Fair, the dramatic art deco
"Century
of Progress" that was centered on this site. Ironically, one of the
images of the fair's midway shows Northerly Island from the sky; the
dominant structures are temporary edifices built to promote Ford
Motors,
Chrysler and Chevrolet. These new beacons of industry were the epitome
of the future, our salvation from the Great Depression. American car
culture had its coming-out party on what is now a vast open field of
wildflowers and migratory birds.
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